romeo and juliet by william shakespeare lesson 3 – paraphrasing the prologue and iambic pentameter

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Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

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Page 1: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

Romeo and Julietby William ShakespeareLesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

Page 2: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

BELLRINGER: COMMONLY CONFUSED OR MISSPELLED WORDS

Commonly confused or misspelled:your/you’re“Your” is used to show possession. “You’re” is a contraction used to replace the words “you + are”. there/their/they’re“There” is a word to show where something is.“Their” is a word to show possession by multiple people.“They’re” is a contraction used to replace the words “they + are”. its/it’s “Its” is word used to show possession by something. “It’s” is a contraction used to replace the words “it + is” or “it + has”.

Page 3: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

BELLRINGER: COMMONLY CONFUSED OR MISSPELLED WORDS PRACTICE

Correct the following sentences.

1)Turn you’re homework into the bin by the door. 2)Their coming today to visit! 3)The bear raised it’s huge paw to strike the helpless hiker. 4)There some nice people in this room. 5)Your only as good as your actions.

Page 4: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

Agenda

Bellringer Iambic Pentameter Notes and Activity Paraphrasing Notes Introduction to the Prologue and

Paraphrasing Activity Exit Slip

Learning Target: I can paraphrase an existing work in order to determine and clarify the author’s overall purpose.

Page 5: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

Iambic Pentameter

Iambic Pentameter

the pattern of 5 unstressed/stressed syllables in a line of poetry

Shakespeare used Iambic Pentameter when composing most of his sonnets and other poetic works.

Page 6: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

Iambic Pentameter

Breaking Down Iambic Pentameter:

IAMB = unstressed/stressed

PENTA = 5

METER = line pattern

ex:

if YOU | would PUT | the KEY | inSIDE | the LOCK

da DUM | da DUM | da DUM | da DUM | da DUM

Page 7: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

Paraphrasing NotesTo paraphrase an author’s work is to restate their ideas in your own

words. How is that different from summarizing?

A summary of a passage includes only the main points of a passage in your own words. It should be much shorter than the original source.

Paraphrasing is transforming the entirety of a passage into your own words. A paraphrased passage should be about as long as the original

source.

Tip:When paraphrasing, cover up all of the passage except the line you are

currently working on. That way, you can be sure to restate most accurately the points in that line before moving on to the next!

Page 8: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

Paraphrasing the Prologue

1    Two households, both alike in dignity,   2    In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,   3    From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,   4    Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.   5    From forth the fatal loins of these two foes   6    A pair of star-cross'd lovers take their life;   7    Whose misadventured piteous overthrows   8    Do with their death bury their parents' strife.   9    The fearful passage of their death-mark'd love,  10    And the continuance of their parents' rage,  11    Which, but their children's end, nought could remove,  12    Is now the two hours' traffic of our stage;  13    The which if you with patient ears attend,  14    What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend.

Page 9: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lesson 3 – Paraphrasing the Prologue and Iambic Pentameter

EXIT SLIP:

The following excerpt is from Act I scene v of Romeo and Juliet when Romeo first sees Juliet during a dance at a party. Paraphrase the following four lines and make an inference as to how this scene will affect Shakespeare’s purpose within this play. 50 The measure done, I'll watch her place of stand,  51   And, touching hers, make blessed my rude hand.

 52   Did my heart love till now? forswear it, sight!  53   For I ne'er saw true beauty till this night.

Learning Target: I can paraphrase an existing work in order to determine and clarify the author’s overall purpose.